North End Water users also get state money

Wyoming’s statewide elected officials have given a nearly half-million dollar boost to efforts to bring North End Water Users onto the Northwest Rural Water District system.

Though their water is currently safe, a couple spikes in nitrate levels in recent years have forced North End’s roughly 200 users to find another source of water; research has shown hooking on to Northwest’s system to be the best option for the north-of-Powell residents.

The Northwest district initially asked for $2.7 million from the state board to help rebuild the North End system and merge it with theirs. But with limited funds available, officials decided it would be best to split the job into phases. The $496,600 awarded by the State Loan and Investment Board last week — and another $281,400 tentatively earmarked for the in the 2012 Wyoming Water Development Commission budget — are intended to cover just the project’s design.

Breaking the project into phases also will give users and the district another year to finalize their plans for paying for construction, said Water Development Commission Director Mike Purcell in a letter to board staff. Future financing likely will include other state funds, he said.

The preliminary estimate for the entire project is $7.5 million to $8 million. North End users have been told it will be at least 2014 before they receive Northwest water.

West Park Hospital

The SLIB board also awarded West Park Hospital $300,000 to help relocate, expand and upgrade its dialysis center.

The project would move the Big Horn Regional Dialysis facility from West Park’s main hospital building to its Cathcart Health Center on Cody’s west strip. The new location would allow up to 10 stations versus the current six.

West Park’s current center can handle no more than 26 dialysis patients and now has a wait list and growing demand. Expansion would help the center treat more locals and visitors to the area, hospital officials have said.

After West Park, Billings is the nearest option for Big Horn Basin patients to get the lifesaving treatments every other day.

The new center also would bring the hospital into full compliance with state and federal standards.

The amount given by the state officials was $60,000 less than the district had asked for, but $300,000 more than the zero dollars staff had recommended. West Park’s proposal had been ranked third among four health projects, with a state Department of Health official ranking it as of “moderate priority.”

However, Wyoming Office of EMS Administrator Andy Gienapp agreed the project was of great necessity, specifically noting the risk of bad weather preventing Cody-area dialysis patients from being able to make it to Billings.

West Park is responsible for the rest of the $900,000 tab on the project. The hospital hopes to have the facility finished by October.

West Park officials say the dialysis treatments are not money-makers, as they’re generally paid for through Medicare.

Meeteetse

Building a transfer station for the town of Meeteetse may prove necessary, but it’s too early to call it an emergency.

Agreeing with the recommendation of Department of Environmental Quality staff, the State Loan and Investment Board denied Meeteetse’s $165,928 request of emergency funding to help it build a transfer station.

The DEQ had called the application “premature” in a letter to state lands and investments staff.

The DEQ’s Craig McOmie wrote that while he thinks the station will ultimately be OK’d, “too many questions remain that need to be addressed from the sizing of the facility to the frequency of the waste being hauled, etc.”

The town has been hauling its trash directly to the Cody landfill since the Meeteetse site’s closure in July 2010. The town’s garbage truck wore out earlier this year and the town had to buy a new one with state money shared among Park County’s governments. A transfer station, which temporarily stores garbage for hauling in fewer, larger loads, would cut down on the town’s trips to Cody, reduce wear on its truck and minimize the time employees spend on garbage.

Meeteetse officials have been asked to refine their design and plan for the transfer station with the DEQ. They also are seeking federal funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.